11 comments:

Cant extract the 2012 Italian Wretched album, filenames too big no matter which drive i try extracted it in. Why do we need all the bandname / album title at the start of every song instead of just 1 - 2 - etc

Sorry about that. Try this rar with no names.This file format is the one I chose years and years ago. It caused me troubles on two occasions only (this Wretched and a Wehrmacht LP in the box-set), so I am not going to modify my whole collection just because of these two.

THANK YOU AGAIN!!!! Been listening to this non-stop since yesterday!!!

YOU RULE!!!

One quick note: Tracks A7, A13, A14 seem to be present in duplicate per your track list …. same name and tag but different year 1982 vs. 2012 … unfortunately they are not the same length and there is no discogs page for it to figure out which one is the correct song … maybe you can figure it out for us?

On my hard drive, the correct files are according to size:#7: 8083 kB (the other is #6)#13: 4597 kb (the other is #15)#14: 6423 kB#17 is missingThis archive was fucked up in the tagging process because the file names length exceed the Windows capacity, and then there is a mix of old files from 5 years ago (2012) with the newliy tagge dones (1982).I would suggest to use the other archive and rename/retag the files from this one.

Where the first numbering is YOUR original track number and the second one is the correct track number and name of the song, e.g.: "A3- Wretched - A11- Wretched - Solo Guerra" means YOUR A3 is actually A11- Wretched - Solo Guerra

As I am listening to Kreator and Sodom, I felt I had to share this beautiful compilation in stunning, crisp FLAC with you so you can share it with your ZERmmunity on your next compilations blast. While there is nothing exclusive on this compilation (even the first ever recording by Helloween, when they were still trying to do Thrash Metal), it does paint a perfect picture of the first 12 years of Germany's NOISE RECORDS, which played a MAJOR ROLE in propagating the harder Metal scene of the early 80s (Chuck Schuldiner of DEATH credits KREATOR as his main influence).